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Towards replacing rpm + yum (0.1):

- installer part:

   - pre install check; check that dirs can be created (no files where
     want to create dirs), move config files according to file
     flags. (.rpmnew etc)

   - run hooks; probably fork to shell and in the parent just do a
     write() of the hook section to a pipe to the shell.

   - store rpm headers for installed packages.

- rpm seems to consider glibc > 2.6.90 to mean greater than
  2.6.90-anything.  That is, a comparison that doesn't mention the
  release field, shouldn't regard the release field of pkgs it
  compares against.  glibc-common-2.6.90 has

	conflicts: glibc < 2.6.90, glibc > 2.6.90

  since rpm doesn't let you do glibc != 2.6.90, and

	requires: glibc = 2.6.90

  will always pull in glibc.  But even with a != relation, would
  glibc-2.6.90-16 be equal to 2.6.90?  glibc 2.7.90-8 dropped it in
  favor of requires = 2.7.90-8 (#225806).

- signed packages

- download (libcurl?)

- figure out how to canonically represent empty string... ~0?

- space calculation before transaction, but ideally, do a number of
  smaller transactions.

- pre-link changing binaries and libs on disk screwing up checksum?

- nail down byte-order of repo file.

- version the sections in the file, put the element size in the header
  so we can add stuff to elements in a backwards compatible way.
  maybe not necessary, we can just add sections that augment the
  sections we want to add to (similar to how rpm has add versioned
  deps).

- pipelined download and install; topo-sort packages in update set,
  pick one with all deps in the current set, add it to the current set
  and satisfy deps against update set => result: minimal update
  transaction.  Queue download and install/update transaction for the
  packages in the minimal set, start over.  This also makes the
  installation phase much more interruptible, basically just stop
  after a sub-transaction finishes.  As we keep the update set around
  as a target, we can restart if needed.  Probably don't need to, can
  just do a new update.  During a sub-transaction we should keep the
  target set (i.e. the current set to be) around as a lock file
  (system.repo.lock or so, see git) so that razor updates are
  prevented if the systems crashes during an update.

Misc ideas:

- keep history of installed packages/journal of package transaction,
  so we can roll back to yesterday, or see what got installed in the
  latest yum update.

- transactions, proper recovery, make sure we don't poop our package
  database (no more rm /var/lib/rpm/__cache*).

- use hash table for package and property lists so we only store
  unique lists (like for string pool).

- use existing, running system as repo; eg

	razor update razor://other-box.local evince

  to pull eg the latest evince and dependencies from another box.  We
  should be able to regenerate a rzr pkg from the system so we can
  reuse the signature from the originating repo.

- Ok, maybe the fastest package set merge method in the end is to use
  the razor_importer, but use a hash table for the properties.  This
  way we can assign them unique IDs immediately (like tokenizing
  strings).

- test suite should be easy, just keep .repo files around and test
  different type of upgrades that way (obsoletes, conflicts, file
  conflicts, file/dir problems etc).  Or maybe just keep a simple file
  format ad use a custom importer to create the .repo files.

- try to clean up the

	do { ... } while (((e++)->name & RAZOR_ENTRY_LAST) == 0);

  idiom for iteration of directories.

- overlay package sets?  mount a read-only /usr over nfs or from the
  virt-host and have a local package set overlaid over the read-only
  one.  shouldn't need new features in the core package set data
  structure, but should be just conventions on top.  we have the base
  package set from the r/o system, the overlay set from the local
  system and we can have an effective package set which is the merge
  of everything from the overlay into the base set.  the effective set
  is easy to compute and we could do it on the fly or cache it.  or
  maybe the effective set is the on-disk representation and the
  overlay can be computed when needed, we just keep a link back to the
  base.

- incremental rawhide repo updates? instead of downloading 10MB zipped
  repo every time, download a diff repo?  Should be pretty small,
  especially if we don't have file checksums in metadata.  Filenames
  and properties are for the most part already present, typically just
  a version bump plus maybe tweaking a couple requires.  The upstream
  repo can store multiple incremental updates in one big file and
  provide an index file that maps updates for a given date (we should
  use repo-file checksums though) to a range in the file: Download the
  index file, search for a match for your latest rawhide.repo file,
  download range of updates that brings it up to date.

- use hash tables for dirs when importing files to avoid qsorting all
  files in rawhide.

Bugs:

- eliminate duplicate entries in package property lists.